Electronic copies of publications provided on this website are for
individual, non-commercial use only. Copyright belongs to those designated
within each publication. Files provided herein are not to be disseminated
or reposted without permission of the appropriate entities. For any articles not available on this website, please email Prof. Alfonso Caramazza, caram@wjh.harvard.edu for further discussion.

Finocchiaro, C.,
& Caramazza, A. (2006). The production of pronominal clitics:
Implications for theories of lexical access. Language and Cognitive
Processes, 21(1-3), Special issue: Language production across the
life span, 141-180. [pdf]

Costa, A., &
Caramazza, A. (2002). The production of noun phrases in English and
Spanish: Implications for the scope of phonological encoding in speech
production. Journal of Memory & Language, 46, 178-198.

Shapiro, K., &
Caramazza, A. (2002). Introduction. The role and neural representation
of grammatical class: A special issue of the Journal of Neurolinguistics.
Journal of Neurolinguistics, 15, 159-170.

Miozzo, M., &
Caramazza, A. (1997). On knowing the auxiliary of a verb that cannot
be named: Evidence for the independence of grammatical and phonological
aspects of lexical knowledge. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 9,
160-166. [pdf]

Caramazza, A.,
& Badecker, W. (1991). Clinical syndromes are not God's gift to
cognitive neuropsychology: A reply to a rebuttal to an answer to a
response to the case against syndrome-based research. Brain &
Cognition, 16, 211-227. [PubMed]

Goodman, R.A., &
Caramazza, A. (1986). Dissociation of spelling errors in written and
oral spelling: The role of allographic conversion in writing. Cognitive
Neuropsychology, 3, 179-206.

1985

Badecker, W., &
Caramazza, A. (1985). On considerations of method and theory governing
the use of clinical categories in neurolinguistics and cognitive neuropsychology:
The case against agrammatism. Cognition, 20, 97-125. [PubMed]

Mahon, B.Z., &
Caramazza, A. (2007). The organization and representation of conceptual
knowledge in the brain: Living kinds and artifacts. In E. Margolis
and S. Laurence (Eds.), Creations of the Mind: Essays on Artifacts
and their Representation. Cambridge: Oxford University Press.